kg, m, and s. They stand for kilogram, meter, and second.
Meter, kilogram, and second. There's an argument for liters, but it is really just cubic meters.
Libya, Myanmar, and the United States do not primarily use the International System of Units (SI). They each have their own systems of measurement that differ from the SI units.
In the context of electromagnetic theory, the fundamental differences between Gaussian units and SI units lie in the way they define the basic electromagnetic quantities such as electric charge, electric field, magnetic field, and current. Gaussian units are based on the electrostatic unit of charge, while SI units are based on the coulomb. This leads to differences in the equations and constants used in electromagnetic theory calculations.
The SI unit for density in liquids is kilograms per cubic meter (kg/m^3).
In a system of units such as the SI, BASE UNITS are defined; other units are derived from those.For example, in the SI, the meter, the kilogram, and the second are base units; the units for area (meters squared), for speed and velocity (meters/second), etc. are derived from the base units. Which units are base units, and which units are derived units, really depends on how the unit is defined. For example, in the SI, pressure is a derived unit; but you can just as well invent a system in which pressure is a base unit, and some other units, that are base units in the SI, are derived in this new system.
There are 7 basic units
Yes. It is one of the 7 basic units of the SI.Yes. It is one of the 7 basic units of the SI.Yes. It is one of the 7 basic units of the SI.Yes. It is one of the 7 basic units of the SI.
The basic unit for length in SI is the meter.
the metre
"The" 3 basic units is wrong; the SI has SEVEN base units: kilogram, meter, second, ampere, candela, kelvin, mole.
It's the "second".
The kilogram is one of the 7 basic units of the SI (the current metric system).
The meter in the SI, the foot in the Imperial system.
Meter, kilogram, and second. There's an argument for liters, but it is really just cubic meters.
Perhaps you refer to the seven basic SI units? The number and choice of base units depends on the system used. In the case of SI, you can find the base units here: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SI_base_unit
The seven basic units are: metre, kilogram, second, ampere, candela, mole, kelvin.
Time and temperature are quantities to be measured. The SI units for time and temperature are the second and the kelvin, respectively.